Artículos de revistas
Client-therapist agreement in the termination process and its association with therapeutic relationship
Fecha
2017-03Registro en:
Olivera Ryberg, Julieta María; Challú, Laura; Gómez Penedo, Juan Martín; Roussos, Andres Jorge; Client-therapist agreement in the termination process and its association with therapeutic relationship; American Psychological Association; Psychotherapy; 54; 1; 3-2017; 88-101
1939-1536
0033-3204
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Olivera Ryberg, Julieta María
Challú, Laura
Gómez Penedo, Juan Martín
Roussos, Andres Jorge
Resumen
There is no consensus among different therapeutic approaches on the process of termination when therapy does not have a prefixed duration. Moreover, both clinicians and researchers are still exploring decision making in the termination of treatment. The present study assessed former client´s perspective of therapy termination in a nonprobabilistic sample from Buenos Aires, Argentina. Seventy-three semistructured interviews, lasting60 min each, were conducted with participants that had finished a therapeutic treatment or dropped out. They were asked about several aspects of therapy, including their experience of termination, specifically who decided to terminate, if there was agreement on termination or not, and their thoughts on the termination process. All interviews were transcribed and analyzed using an adaptation of Consensual Qualitative Research (CQR). Quantitative analyses were also conducted to examine associations between variables. Two main factors emerged from the analysis: client/therapist initiative on termination; and level of agreement between client and therapist regarding termination. Whereas nearly all (95%) of therapistinitiated termination cases agreed on termination, client-initiated termination cases could be sorted in agreed (49%) and disagreed (51%) terminations. Both therapist-initiated terminations and agreed upon terminations presented more categories of positive termination motives, better therapeutic bond, and higher overall satisfaction with treatment. Implications for research and clinical practice are discussed.